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19:00
const text = await fetch('...').then(res => res.text());
console.log(text); // Logs: Promise { <pending> }
what am I doing wrong?
this is in node
using node-fetch
const promise = await fetch();
const text = await res.text();
console.log(text);
iirc like res.json(), it returns a promise that needs to be awaited
@Shmiddty await ( fetch().then() );
why don't I have to do that for client-side code?
ah or that
@Shmiddty depends on the context, the response object is async in node i think
getting the same result
19:04
@Shmiddty operator precedence, I'd actually be surprised if it were different on the client-side
with both suggestions
but why would you ever have to do await ( fetch().then() )?
@Shmiddty Don't think you would.
I think something else is going on
any ideas?
@Shmiddty Can you make a reproducible test case?
What fetch library are you using? nvm
node-fetch
I mean, those two lines of code are pretty much all I'm doing
besides fetching an actual URL
I've also got a catch, but that's not being hit
const text = await fetch(url)
    .then(res => res.text())
    .then(text => (console.log(text), text))

console.log(text);

// logs: Promise { <pending> } first
// then logs the response text
it's almost as if await isn't doing anything
19:15
node --version?
does await work if a function is not defined with async?
fetch is not a native function in that case
oh, it does
fetch() only needs to return a promise to wotk with await. The function that CONTAINS await must be async though
You can/do await promises
!!> await Promise.resolve(1)
@towc "SyntaxError: await is only valid in async functions and async generators"
19:17
well, not in ff apparently
Yes in ff
but that works in the opera console
It has to be inside of an async function
ohhi
hi. you launch a rocket, yet?
19:19
const fetch = require("node-fetch");

(async () => {
  const res = await fetch("http://icanhazip.com");
  const text = await res.text();

  console.log({ text });
})();
@Shmiddty This worked for me.
huh, so ff's console is somehow sync?
!!> (async () => console.log(await Promise.resolve(true)))()
@ndugger "SyntaxError: illegal character"
Pft, ios quotes
// As did this

const fetch = require("node-fetch");

(async () => {
  const text = await fetch("http://icanhazip.com").then(res => res.text());

  console.log({ text });
})();
@ndugger "SyntaxError: missing ) in parenthetical"
@towc No, it does not.
@ndugger "undefined" Logged: true
Nope, no rocket yet. Haven't returned to the ALZ
19:20
There
@MadaraUchiha I was actually referring to the awaited function. The statement I made is so wrong, because it's not even a function. Ignore that
After further thought, i am going to build a base in the cove tree room
for a specific reason?
@towc functions are sync by default
mainly for temporary storage and crafting
19:21
@ndugger chrome's console lets me do the await thing just fine
but also for recharging batteries
await 1 works in chrome, but not in ff
!!> await 1
@towc "SyntaxError: await is only valid in async functions and async generators"
@towc well that’s just not standard
cove tree room because it's still high enough for seamoth access, but also very close to the ALZ
19:22
is that entrance big enough for a cyclops?
more than big enough
or is there an ALZ, too?
there's one corner in the ILZ that you have to manuver through, but it's not too bad
well... tbh i'm not sure which is the ILZ and ALZ
but behind the cove tree is a lava shaft that leads to a huge foggy chamber that i assume is the ALZ
i haven't been down the hole behind the DRF
near mountains entrance
19:24
@MadaraUchiha what's your node version?
9.4
a.k.a. latest
0.10
But await semantics haven't changed in quite a while. I don't see why it wouldn't work out for you. if you're at >8.4 or so
I'm on 8.7.0
I’m still on 6.x... don’t tell my boss
19:26
I want to cry, this delta function is a fucking nightmare
show me desired output
@Luggage desired output for my example is your {text: <your IP address>}
Which is what I get under 9.4.
I'm switching to 8.7, let's see.
That was to Sterling
@Shmiddty I get the same result for 8.7.0
Try making a test.js file with my exact code in it, and run it.
What do you get?
config = {
    name: 'foo',
    location: [1,2]
    bar: {
        foo: [1,2,3,4]
    }
}

changed = {
    name: 'foo',
    location: [1,3]
    bar: {
        foo: []
    }
}
@Luggage basically I need to return a delta object that says location and bar['foo'] is no longer the same
19:31
@SterlingArcher For what purpose?
in what shape?
However, config may contain more keys than changed has, so these lodash methods aren't cutting it
@MadaraUchiha I'm creating a delta of event handlers so when the config changes, it knows what events to fire off
did you look at the deep diff i linked earlier?
I have used it. it wasn't just a random googled link
I may have missed that
relink?
19:32
@MadaraUchiha I get an ip address
@SterlingArcher I hope your object isn't very deep and you don't do this very often. Recursion is stupid expensive.
@Shmiddty In that case, await is working properly.
if he knows how big his objects are it should be fine
Please create a complete sample where the faulty behavior is displayed.
const fetch = require('node-fetch');

function main(seatmapUrl, outputFilename) {
  console.log(seatmapUrl);
  console.log(getSVGText(seatmapUrl));
}

async function getSVGText(seatmapUrl) {
  const text = await fetch(seatmapUrl)
    .then(res => res.text())
    .catch(err => console.log('Error fetching seatmap: ', err));

  return text;
}

main.apply(null, process.argv.slice(2));
19:34
@MadaraUchiha that's where I'm struggling, I really don't want to recurse this
@Shmiddty This isn't in the REPL right?
@Luggage gonna chat with my team about npmjs.com/package/deep-diff
@SterlingArcher You're traversing an object deeply, either you are going to recurse, or some package will.
@MadaraUchiha that's the entire file
// function from stackoverflow.com/questions/37065663/…
function isArrayEqual(x, y) {
  console.log('comparing', x, y)
  return _(x).differenceWith(y, _.isEqual).isEmpty();
}

function update(instance) {
  const eventDelta = [];
  Object.keys(instance).forEach((key) => {
     if (typeof instance[key] === 'object') {
      console.log('its an object', key)
      Object.keys(instance[key]).forEach((subKey) => {
        if (Array.isArray(instance[subKey]) && !isArrayEqual(config[subKey], instance[subKey])) {
This is what I'm working with right now, but it's a fucking mess
19:35
You can always loop over the results of deep-diff, throw awayt the change you don't care about and make it look like what you want
@Shmiddty That makes sense.
An async function always returns a Promise.
console.log(getSVGText(seatmapUrl)) will log a Promise object.
@Snowmonkey , u understand me , plz see me how plz plz as answer plz — SøÅ›ø ÐålợȜà ZåÈœră 1 min ago
const fetch = require('node-fetch');

async function main(seatmapUrl, outputFilename) {
  console.log(seatmapUrl);
  console.log(await getSVGText(seatmapUrl));
}

async function getSVGText(seatmapUrl) {
  const text = await fetch(seatmapUrl)
  .then(res => res.text())
  .catch(err => console.log('Error fetching seatmap: ', err));

  return text;
}

main.apply(null, process.argv.slice(2));
This is how it should look like.
ah
I see
Alternatively, getSVGText(seatmapUrl).then(console.log), but get used to using async and await, the resulting code is seriously much cleaner overall.
19:44
This is going to be a stupid question
If I have react-scripts. And I wrote a little component, and run react-scripts build

If I just plop the resulting js file, can I just auto-magically use the component in an existing site
@Luggage hard negative, they don't want an expensive package in
4.93 KB but ok :)
I mean CPU expensive
@Cereal You will need to call ReactDOM.render() and pass it a real DOM node
But yeah, shouldn't be a problem.
19:46
Which I get, these guys are very proud of maintaining as efficient codebase as they can
> the onus is on the developer to understand and self impose immutability constraints to ensure the stability of our code
pretty well said
!!s/o/a/
don't flag bait cap @MadaraUchiha im gonna tell on you
!!undo
:P
Alright
19:48
@SterlingArcher See, I kind of like my tools working for me, and not having to work for my tools.
I treat my objects as immutable, because not having random mutations everywhere makes it easier to understand.
But using something like ImmutableJS which requires a completely different API to access/change anything?
your award is in the mail
No thanks.
if config.foo is an object, is change.foo guaranteed to be (as opposed to a string or array)?
@Luggage if change.foo exists, yes
so always same type or missing?
19:52
Always the same type
That's a guarantee
and only keys already on config neeed be tested? no 'new' keys on changed?
!!onshape or stardew
@rlemon stardew
!!wow
19:58
woo, go windows
i opened a folder, and windows said it was empty
i exited, and then reopened the folder and it wasn't empty
not a network drive
lol this is annoying, gotta love non devs, or people who claim they used to be...
so I made this fixed scrolling thing, kind of hard to explain it's basically just copying facebooks right panel scrolling behavior
and on devices that smooth scroll the right panel has slight rubber banding
> Looks like it’s due to the smooth scrolling nature on the Mac, is this in Chrome or Safari? Not seeing it on my system personally, but not surprised because the right panel position is updated in order to keep it at a fixed position due to the smart scroll.
^ my response
then the guy comes back with this
> I am using chrome on a Mac. The sticky behavior was intended to mimic the left panel in Facebook, which doesn’t have that jittery effect for me on Facebook’s site when using the same Chrome/MacOS.

> Was their implementation significantly different than the one we are using?
lol I just respond... Sorry I don't have access to their source code.
random vent since I never do in here anymore I try to not mention work at all tbh
@Loktar What effect are they looking for?
@Loktar isn't that a js/css thing though?
My screen is large so I'm just seeing a normal position: fixed thing
20:09
@MadaraUchiha yeah it's that you're looking at it I'm sure
which I use the same positioning
@KevinB why isn't that Owen Wilson
however if the right panel is really long it wills croll with the main content for a bit
then stop when it's at the bottom
then scroll up when you start scrolling up
@Loktar Sounds like position: sticky to me.
@Luggage no, every key that 'changed' has 'config' is guaranteed to have
my implementation does exactly that, that's easy
20:09
same structure too
the only "issue" is when you scroll using any sort of smooth scrolling method the right side takes like 200 ms or so to update due to my throttling of the event
@SterlingArcher fix it
so it will rubber band ever so slightly
!!forget wow
@SterlingArcher Command wow forgotten.
20:10
tbh I'm not worried about it at all
just funny to think we can just rip any sites code like it's nothing
this features been done for > 6 months as well so meh.
@Loktar I don't think you need JS for this
Take a look at position: sticky
who said I was even using JS?
!!learn wow '<>https://media.giphy.com/media/udmx3pgdiD7tm/giphy.gif'
@SterlingArcher Command wow learned
!!wow
!!undo
!!forget wow
20:11
@SterlingArcher Command wow forgotten.
!!learn wow <>'https://media.giphy.com/media/udmx3pgdiD7tm/giphy.gif'
@SterlingArcher Command wow learned
'https://media.giphy.com/media/udmx3pgdiD7tm/giphy.gif'
!!forget wow
ok somebody else do it
20:11
that's why I posted it though to get beat up over it, anytime someone complains the chat has a tendency to jump on the phantom persons side đŸ˜›
@SterlingArcher Command wow forgotten.
I do it as well
apparently im a moron
@Loktar Oh, I'm just saying that this feature is natively supported in browsers now, so what they're asking for sounds totally fixable
20:13
@MadaraUchiha ah I gotcha
@Luggage good lord
tipranks.com/stocks/aapl side menu here uses that feature, if you want to look, pure CSS.
Talk me through the logic?
actually, this might work well
I take back my snide remark đŸ˜‹
20:14
!!learn wow <>https://media.giphy.com/media/udmx3pgdiD7tm/giphy.gif
@SterlingArcher Command wow learned
It's like your comparison only I separated the 'what type of object' into compareValues, the object comparison into compareObjects and made it recursive
aha!
@Luggage I guess the obvious question is the O notation is dependent on the nested comparison levels?
20:15
depends on the input object
hmm yeah it's not quit that simple though, one sec
This is what has to happen. Idk I think sticky might be on the right track regardless though
the thing is it needs to stop once it reaches the bottom of it's content (the right side)
@Luggage this is burrilliant
whereas the main area needs to continue scrolling
@Loktar Sticky does that.
I didn't do the array comparison, which is a big part
20:16
Open the page I linked in iPhone mode, you'll see it.
but the structure should become clear
wth my gif isn't even working...
it's just static instead of animated, weird
ok I'll make a reduced vs and see if I can get it working easy enough
it's at least a 50% solution and I can rip out some code I'm using
@Luggage I actually have the array comparison handled, so it'll plug in perfectly
thanks dude, this makes a lot more sense. Way cleaner recursive too
ty @MadaraUchiha
you can simplify it. like use strings as the path, not that array, etc
np
20:18
Yeah I need to tweak it and add a couple edge cases, but the logic is what I was after
Huh, imgur can take videos now
^ a tipranks ad
cleverly disguised
You guys aren't exactly our audience :D
flagging as spam
hasn't imgur always been able to gif-ify videos?
@SterlingArcher It was news to me.
I know it could mp4-ify gifs.
20:22
guys Bayonetta 2 is coming out for switch in a little more than 2 weeks
@corvid Rejoice!
@MadaraUchiha yeah that's basically what I'm looking for without JS and without the rubber banding
so much better solution
@corvid cool another rerelease...
that's why I won't buy a dumb switch
yet
but... her high heels have guns in them
I mean it's a great game, just talking crap about the switch is all đŸ˜›
I want some more new releases on it
20:25
Does anyone know why I can't use chrome.tabs.insertCSS() from a content script in a Chrome extension? It always throws Cannot read property 'insertCSS' of undefined and the tabs permission is in the manifest
@William haha that's awesome
I couldn't train my dog to do that given infinite universes
show it this video
@MadaraUchiha I remember the issue now.. our mid content is super long so this needs to scroll immediately to the bottom
sticky looks like it will scroll to the bottom once all of the content is at the bottom
@Loktar Yeah, then you're fucked.
20:27
yeah, that's why I had the implementation I did :/
it's actually close to FB's
using position relative, etc.
but they somehow don't have the rubber banding I get
man I was super excited for this haha
it works well actually..
@Loktar I'm guessing they are being naughty and don't throttle.
and no overhead
yeah, maybe I'll just be naughty too I suppose
@Loktar Wait, I think you can actually make it instantly scroll
What if you use bottom: instead of top: or vice versa?
ah yeah I'll mess with that
hmm no go, oh well
ty anyway for the heads up
magic
20:30
basically it just needs to scroll until it shows all it's content, then stop, but let the other side continue scrolling forever, and as soon as you start scrolling up show it's content again as well.. sticky is so damn close
piece of crap chrome extension documentation does not state that insertCSS cannot be used from content scripts, in fact it links it from the content script section, but tabs are supposedly allowed from background pages
20:32
@Shadow yeah the chrome extension API is.... odd, in some places.
forgot something pretty grave though
worst is that if you call window.stop(), the injected JS content script runs perfectly fine, but CSS is cancelled all together
when you wrap the element it is gone
because i forgot to check the depth of dom node while cloning react children fml
nothing like more hacks because google doesn't work as it should
kinda like lieing
20:36
I am gonna shed some tears brb
20:49
0
Q: Why are cards being lost in Javascript ES6 "Game of War"?

J. MunsonTo gain a better understanding of Javascript ES6 and object oriented programming in general, I decided to try writing a simple Game of War. At first glance, the game seems to run fine... it always returns the name of the winning player, and because it is a game of chance it seems to return any g...

reduce(
    (cum, cur) => cum.concat(cur),
        []
    )
Crying.
Am I missing anything?
> x = [{x: 1}]
[ { x: 1 } ]
> y = x.slice(0)
[ { x: 1 } ]
> x[0] === y[0]
true
> z = new Array(x)
[ [ { x: 1 } ] ]
> z[0] === x[0]
false
>
wat
isn't that a shallow copy as well?
since it's a new array they aren't referencing each other
lol no
now I get it
It creates a a nested array
and assigns the property onto that array
!!> x = [{x: 1}]; y = new Array(x); console.log(x[0], y[0])
20:55
@MadaraUchiha "undefined" Logged: {"x":1},[{"x":1}]
user1596138
@MadaraUchiha Why did you answer that
@Jhoverit Couldn't find a suitable dupe in a few seconds
Feel free to link a dupe and I'll hammer it.
user1596138
Yea it's pretty specific lol
Hmm, I could have sworn Object.assign or an {...users} would have cloned without referencing the original array
damn you mutability
You are absolutely correct, I mis-typed my answer I meant to use the spead operator in the new array like so const clone = new Array(...users); Answer has been updated — Curt Husting 25 secs ago
Waiting for him to realize that doing that won't make clone[0] different from original[0]
user1596138
20:57
@SterlingArcher Yeah it would
user1596138
?
If I had a version of _.set() that doesn't mutate the first argument, I'd be a happy man.
user1596138
@SterlingArcher Thats what is in Madara's answer
It's updating the original, same with {...users} spread
oh i should probably read

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